Theriogenology
Volume 69, Issue 9 , Pages 1139-1147, June 2008

The mating behavior and reproduction performance in a multi-sire mating system for pigs

Department of Agroecology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, University of Aarhus, P.O. Box 50, DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark

Received 9 November 2006; received in revised form 14 January 2008; accepted 19 January 2008. published online 10 April 2008.

Abstract 

An important aim of organic animal production is to allow natural animal behaviour. Regarding reproduction techniques, artificial insemination is permitted but natural mating is preferred. The outdoor multi-sire system, where the sows are placed in large paddocks with a group of boars, is one example of a service system, which complies well with the organic ideals of facilitating natural animal behavior. However, very little knowledge is available about such system. Seven groups of in total of 47 sows and 31 boars were observed to study the mating behavior in an outdoor multi-sire mating system and the subsequent reproduction results. The time of start of courtship, behavior and the cause of disruption if the courtship was terminated, were recorded each time a boar courted a sow. All aggressive interactions between the boars were also recorded to estimate the boar ranking order. The observations revealed numerous poor quality matings, a huge variation in the number of times sows are mated, and overworked boars. Only 35% of all copulations lasted 2min or more and 63% of all copulations were disrupted, mainly by competitor boars. The higher social status of the boar, the more copulations did it disrupt (p<0.05). The outcome was an unacceptable variation in reproduction results. Only 71% of all estrus sows conceived, corresponding to a pregnancy rate of 77% of all mated sows. A large inter-group variation in reproduction performance was observed, indicating scope for improvements. In some groups all sows showed estrus and all sows conceived. Recommendations for improvement of the system are proposed.

Keywords: Multi-sire mating, Mating behavior, Mating quality, Reproduction, Organic production

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PII: S0093-691X(08)00074-5

doi:10.1016/j.theriogenology.2008.01.030

Theriogenology
Volume 69, Issue 9 , Pages 1139-1147, June 2008